SAIF Partners, Accel Partners, a unnamed global investment entity and Swiggy’s existing investors participated in this round, as per a press statement.

Swiggy will use the funds for expanding its geographical footprint and brand building.

The startup was formed in 2014 by Sriharsha Majety, Nandan Reddy and Rahul Jaimini. Majety and Reddy are BITS Pilani alumnus while Jaimini is an alumnus of IIT Kharagpur. In April, Swiggy raised seed capital of $2 million from SAIF Partners and Accel Partners.

“We have seen a 10x growth in order numbers over the past few months and this investment will help us to expand exponentially as we intend to establish ourselves in several new cities by the end of the year. Combining technology with our own delivery fleet allows us to provide users a superior experience, which has been our key strength, and we will continue to build on it,” said Majety.

Swiggy offers online ordering service from restaurants in the Koramangala neighbourhood of Bangalore and manages delivery using a fleet of personnel equipped with smartphones.

It recently started operations in Gurgaon and Hyderabad where it has partnered with over 100 restaurants. Swiggy has also tied up with bangalore-based ‘cloud kitchens’ Eatongo and Brekkie and is in the process of signing up with few more. Cloud kitchens are online breakfast and brunch units that do not have a physical restaurant. They offer food though their websites/apps and also deliver to their customers.

The total food delivery market in India is estimated to be $6 billion and continues to expand at a rapid clip. “Swiggy’s delivery infrastructure solves a major need in the market by enabling restaurants to concentrate on their core business and scale up their delivery revenues. Simultaneously, the product’s ease of use and the convenience it provides to consumers, has resulted in strong repeat rates and an increased customer base,” said Sumer Juneja, principal at NVP India.

The online food ordering and delivery space has turned out to be a new hot space for investors, as per data from VCCEdge, the data research platform of VCCircle. Swiggy, competes with Foodpanda, TinyOwl, delyver.com and others for a slice of what is becoming a fairly crowded space. Others like Zomato have also entered the food ordering business but is not involved with delivery itself and just provides an ordering platform.

Mumbai-based TinyOwl, which offers a location-based mobile app for ordering food, had raised $15 million (Rs 93 crore) in Series B round of funding led by Matrix Partners in February this year. Bangalore-based mobile-only food ordering startup TapCibo Online Solutions Pvt Ltd, which operated under the brand TapCibo, rebranded itself as Dazo and raised an undisclosed amount in seed funding from a bunch of entrepreneurs including founders of CommonFloor and TaxiForSure last month.

The leader in this space today is Foodpanda.com, a Rocket Internet-backed global, multi-location online food ordering marketplace. Foodpanda had raised $100 million funding led by global financial services giant Goldman Sachs early this month. It had also acquired two key competitors in the country- Just East India and TastyKhana.

Before these ventures sprouted up, restaurants depended on their own delivery personnel for pushing sales over telephone orders. Indeed, vast chunk of the market is still dominated by such a system.

NVP has been an active investor in India with investments across companies and sectors. This is the second known investment by NVP in India this year, according to VCCEdge data.

In April, it participated in Sulekha.com’s Series C round of funding which was led by Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC. It has also invested in companies such as Qubole Inc, Acidaes Solutions Pvt Ltd that runs CRMnext, Cholamandalam Finance, ING Vysya Bank, IndusInd Bank, Asian Genco, Fashionandyou, Komli Media and Yatra.com.